Originally posted by: Soviet
Interesting experiment though, would a cpu still work if dropped in boiling water for a few minutes? Id say maybe.
Originally posted by: Soviet
Interesting experiment though, would a cpu still work if dropped in boiling water for a few minutes? Id say maybe.
Originally posted by: Zap
Originally posted by: Soviet
Interesting experiment though, would a cpu still work if dropped in boiling water for a few minutes? Id say maybe.
It depends on the chip and the procedure. You'd need to thoroughly dry the chip after boiling of course, and some chips may not survive 100ºC, though some will. For instance Intel states (at developer.intel.com) that the original Prescotts are operational to 90ºC and can survive 110ºC without dying (but won't be operational at that heat).
Originally posted by: Kwint Sommer
I like to use the shower. My high pressure massaging shower head is really good at cleaning out all that built up gunk, especially from hard drives. I hear the steam is great for your RAM, but maybe that's just a rumor.
Originally posted by: Kwint Sommer
The freezer can kill your hard drives but I'm currently running my motherboard sealed in a dorm fridge/window unit closed system that's giving me an ambient temperature below -30C. I built it using free stuff from around my dorm and a $20 budget.
Home freezers are neither intended to dissipate the level of heat produced by a computer nor run perpetually but a custom built freezer like mine with external drives can make for an awesome cooler. However, freon has a better specific heat than air. Hence I will be converting my system to a direct die phase change system this Christmas when I have little time and I will of course be holding myself to a $20 budget.